Vaulty - Ridiculously easy end-to-end encrypted data sharing | Product Hunt
source link: https://www.producthunt.com/posts/vaulty-2
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Support is great. Feedback is even better.
"Thanks for checking out Vaulty! We would love it if you gave it a try and let us know if you found it useful or if you ran into any trouble.
To help out we provide a 20% coupon for ProductHunt folks and also enabled a 30-day free trial to take your time testing, with no strings attached."
Hello folks at ProductHunt! We built Vaulty after we got really uncomfortable with the amount of times we had received important sensitive information like Stripe API keys and SSH private keys over insecure channels like Slack or email. We thought that there should be a better way.
That's how we built Vaulty; the easiest way to receive sensitive data securely, with end-to-end encryption through your browser. All you need to do is:
1. Create a vault with a click of a button 2. Share its unique URL with the person that owns the sensitive data.
Then, you just wait for them to share the data with you by opening the vault's unique URL and entering the data in the text area. They do not even need an account!
All data sent to you is end-to-end encrypted and only you can decrypt and view them — not even us at Vaulty can do that.
Vaulty has already proven itself to be super useful for us at LOGIC, as we now provide our clients with a ridiculously easy way to share their sensitive data with us. We now receive no more passwords or API keys in emails.
We hope you give it a go and find it useful too! Thanks a lot 🙏.
@eonpilot hi and thanks for the comment! It's a great question.
No, they do not have access to the sealed content. Only you can view it, as the sealed content is decrypted locally with a key stored locally in your browser and is never transmitted through the network. Not even us, the makers of Vaulty, could access the contents of any sealed vaults.
@eonpilot it's actually the other way around — at least for now!
When you create a vault, it is empty and can be sealed by the person with whom you share its URL, by filling in the data in the text area there. This uses the vault's public key.
Then you, and only you, the owner of the vault can unseal and view the decrypted comments of the vault. This happens with the private key, which is loaded in your browser and never transmitted through the network.
An example use case is that you send a vault URL to a non-tech-savvy person to share some sensitive information with you (e.g. ask your non-tech-savvy accountant for an API key that only they have access to).
We also created a video demonstrating the workflow here: .
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